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Posted:
24 September 2007
Turkey Raising
Turkeys are easier to raise than chicken. And turkey meat is more expensive and
easily sold in hotels. According to those with experience in raising
turkeys, the following may be used as guides:
a. Turkeys may be allowed to roam about, and gather in barn at night.
b. Since turkeys eat plants, those that they should not eat must be fenced.
c. Besides grass, turkeys should be fed with mixed grated coconut, fruit peels,
corn, sorghum, fish and shrimps.
d. Turkeys in coops (that are elevated from the ground), consume more food than
those roaming about. But they should not be allowed to stay in coop always
because this will easily wear out the flooring of their house because of their
weight.
e. For 500 turkeys, 15 sacks of feed are normally consumed weekly, but this is
reduced if they are allowed to roam.
f. One way is to have a shelter in the midst of their pasteurland where they
will always find food and water.
g. This shelter must also provide place for sleep and nest. The shelter must
be about three (3) meters high, five (5) meters wide and 10 meters long. The
four sides are open, and the floor can absorb manure. In one side are nests,
and at the other are food and water in separate containers.
h. The flooring should be three (3) meters longer than the shelter, fenced with
about five (5) feet wire where they can mate and spread out their wings, and
eat.
i. If the weather is good, they should be allowed to roam to pick insects and
eat grass. So as not to run out of forage or overeat them in a place, they
should be transferred from place to place in the field, separated by wire fence.
j. Feeding is twice a day -- in the morning before they are set free, and in
the afternoon when they come back.
k. Feed must contain 24% protein, which is not attained in most commercial
feeds. In the U.S., turkeys are given: 24% protein, 2% calcium and 0.9%
phosphorus. Here, they are given 16% protein, 24% calcium and 1% phosphorus.
Turkeys grow up to five (5) kilos in four months in this diet. Normally, a male
turkey weighs 10 kilos and a female 7 kilos within 18 weeks.
l. They must always be provided with food and clean water. If necessary (which
is not often) they are given powdered antibiotic in their food and drink or if
necessary, by injection.
m. The turkey chick cannot see up to age one week after hatching, so they are
spoonfed until they can eat by themselves. (In the U.S., these are given milk,
which is too expensive for us).
n. For every 20-25 female turkeys, only one male is needed. So that egg laying
will be continuous, the mother turkey is not allowed to sit on her eggs. These
are gathered and hatched in the incubator.
o. Eggs are gathered in April or May, and incubated around July.
p. They are hatched in the first week of August and are raised from 26-28
weeks. (The raisers set these for Thanksgiving Day or Christmas).
q. Turkeys molt (shed feathers) once a year. After molting, they lay more
eggs. So, the raisers make them molt in preparation for Christmas. Molting is
hastened when food is scarce and day is short. So, the feed of layers is
reduced and are kept longer in a dark coop and by releasing them much later in
the morning.
r. Turkeys diseases generally, are chicken pox, blackening of the head, birds
pest, neck paralysis (cannot swallow") and external parasite. The blackening of
the head is the most serious disease of turkeys. This is acquired from feeds
and contaminated water.
Source: Greenfields Feb. 1990 /
ncc.gov.ph